New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care : Further Case Studies and Expanded Theory.

1. Verfasser: Tilley, Lorna.
Weitere Verfasser: Schrenk, Alecia A.
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Cham : Springer, 2016.
Umfang/Format: 1 online resource (390 pages).
Schriftenreihe: Bioarchaeology and social theory
Schlagworte:
Parallelausgabe: New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care : Further Case Studies and Expanded Theory (Print version:)
Online Zugang: Available online
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245 1 0 |a New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care :  |b Further Case Studies and Expanded Theory. 
300 |a 1 online resource (390 pages). 
490 1 |a Bioarchaeology and Social Theory Ser. 
500 |a Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2019. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. 
505 0 |a Intro -- Dedication -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Contributors -- About the Editors -- Chapter 1: Introduction: New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care -- New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care: The Chapters -- Case Studies: Applying and Adapting the Bioarchaeology of Care Methodology -- New Directions for Bioarchaeology of Care Research -- Ethics and Accountability in the Bioarchaeology of Care -- Conclusion -- Common Themes, Shared Concerns, and New Horizons -- References -- Chapter 2: Showing That They Cared: An Introduction to Thinking, Theory and Practice in the Bioarchaeology of Care -- Introducing the Bioarchaeology of Care Approach -- The Index of Care -- The Bioarchaeology of Care: Principles, Definitions, Caveats and Constraints -- Principles -- Definitions -- Caveats and Constraints -- Bioarchaeology of Care Stage 1: Describe, Diagnose, Document -- Bioarchaeology of Care Stage 2: Assess Disability and Need for Care -- Clinical Impacts -- Functional Implications -- Bioarchaeology of Care Stage 3: Develop a 'Model of Care' -- Bioarchaeology of Care Stage 4: Interpretation: Agency and Identity -- Collective Agency and Identity -- Individual Agency and Identity -- Issues and Ethics in Bioarchaeology of Care Analysis -- Conclusion -- Appendix 1 -- References -- Part I: Case Studies: Applying and Adapting the Bioarchaeology of Care Methodology -- Chapter 3: Applying the Index of Care to the Case Study of a Bronze Age Teenager Who Lived with Paralysis: Moving from Speculation to Strong Inference -- Introduction -- Materials and Methods -- "Lesley" -- Paleopathological Analysis -- Step 1: Differential Diagnosis -- Paralytic Poliomyelitis -- Cerebral Palsy -- Step 2: Clinical Impact -- Paralytic Poliomyelitis: Late Onset Symptoms to Paraplegia -- Cerebral Palsy: Onset from Birth. 
590 |a ebook1019 
590 |a Online publication 
590 |a fys2019 
505 8 |a Step 3: Identifying a "Model of Care" -- Paralytic Poliomyelitis: Short-Term Intensive Care and Long-­Term Accommodation -- Cerebral Palsy: Long-Term Care and Accommodation -- Step 4: Care and Agency -- Paralytic Poliomyelitis -- Cerebral Palsy -- Mortuary Context and Special Treatment -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 4: Cared for or Outcasts: A Case for Continuous Care in the Precontact U.S. Southwest -- Possible Disability and Care in the Precontact U.S. Southwest -- Burial 88 -- Pelvic Trauma -- Traditional Care Among the Pueblo -- Pueblo Healers -- Management and Care -- Essential Management of Immediate Complications -- Instrumental Care of Long-Term Complications -- Reconstructing Daily Life -- Implications for Group and Individual Identity, Social Relations, and Social Practice -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 5: Inferring Disability and Care Provision in Late Prehistoric Tennessee -- Introduction -- Biocultural Context of Care -- Paleopathology of B271A and Its Implications -- Accidental vs. Intentional Trauma? -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Applying the 'Index of Care' to a Person Who Experienced Leprosy in Late Medieval Chichester, England -- Introduction -- Definitions, Care Provision and the Epidemiological Transitions -- Bioarchaeological Evidence for Care -- Concepts of Disease, Levels of Knowledge, the Meaning of Disease and the Importance of Context -- 'Material' and Methods -- Results: Description, Analysis of Aetiology, and Interpretation -- Description -- Diagnosis and Aetiological Interpretation -- Discussion -- Step 2: What Can Be Said About This Man's Experience? -- What Cannot Be Said About This Man's Experience? -- Step 3: Construction of a Model of Care -- Step 4: The Implications for This Man and His Community -- Conclusions -- References. 
505 8 |a Chapter 7: Dealing with Difference: Using the Osteobiographies of a Woman with Leprosy and a Woman with Gigantism from Medieval Poland to Identify Practices of Care -- Osteobiography -- Disability During Life and Treatment After Death -- Context -- The Woman with Leprosy -- Paleopathological Description -- Estimating Disability and Care -- Medical Treatment and Therapies -- Mortuary Treatment -- The 'Giant Woman' - A Case Study of Gigantism and Care -- Description of the Female from Grave 23/77 -- Estimating Disability and Care -- Mortuary Treatment -- Discussion -- Two Types of Care -- Care and Disability -- Text Sources -- Conclusions -- References -- Websites -- Chapter 8: A Post-mortem Evaluation of the Degree of Mobility in an Individual with Severe Kyphoscoliosis Using Direct Digital Radiography (DR) and Multi-Detector Computed Tomography (MDCT) -- Introduction -- Materials and Methods -- The Site and Its History -- The Radiographic Study -- Bioarchaeology of Care -- Step 1A: Description of the Remains -- Step 1B: Differential Diagnosis -- Step 1C: Document the Cultural, Social, Economic and Environmental Context -- Step 1D: Mortuary Practices -- Step 2A: Clinical Characteristics -- Step 2B: Functional Consequences -- Pulmonary and Cardiac Functional Impairment -- Discussion -- References -- Chapter 9: Surviving Trepanation: Approaching the Relationship of Violence and the Care of "War Wounds" Through a Case Study from Prehistoric Peru -- Introduction: Trepanation as Care -- Case Study: The Chanka of Andahuaylas Peru -- Materials and Methods -- Results -- Osteobiographic Profile -- Cranial Trauma -- Postcranial Trauma -- Discussion -- A Regional View of Trepanation Practices -- Coping with Trauma and Trepanation -- Traumatic Brain Injury -- Treatment Procedures -- Caregiver Experience -- Theorizing Trauma and Care -- Conclusions -- References. 
505 8 |a Part II: New Directions for Bioarchaeology of Care Research -- Chapter 10: Mummy Studies and the Soft Tissue Evidence of Care -- Introduction -- Surgical Intervention -- Therapeutic Tattooing -- Medicinal Plants -- Expanded Case Study: Piraino 1 -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Towards a Bioarchaeology of Care of Children -- Introduction -- Health Care and Parental Nurturing Care -- Defining Our Children -- Man Bac: A Biosocial Background -- Man Bac: The Bioarchaeology of Care Model -- Stage 1 of the Bioarchaeology of Care Model -- Health -- Demography -- Burial Treatment -- Stage 2 of the Bioarchaeology of Care Model -- Stage 3 of the Bioarchaeology of Care Model -- Stage 4 of the Bioarchaeology of Care Model -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 12: Growing Old: Biographies of Disability and Care in Later Life -- Introduction -- Old Age in the Social Sciences -- A Life Course Perspective on Care -- Old Age and Identity -- Disability and Biography -- Age and Carer Identities -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 13: Caring for Bodies or Simply Saving Souls: The Emergence of Institutional Care in Spanish Colonial America -- Introduction -- To be a Good Christian -- Institutions of Care in the Americas -- The Hospital de Indios in New Spain -- Applying the Bioarchaeology of Care in the Americas -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: An Exploration of a Modified Bioarchaeology of Care Methodological Approach for Historic Institutionalized Populations -- Introduction -- Institutions of Care -- Examining Efficacy of Care -- Modified Method -- Efficacy of Care at the Individual Level -- Efficacy of Care at the Population Level -- Application of the New Method -- Oneida State Custodial Asylum -- Materials -- Individual Level Analysis -- Population-Level Analysis -- Conclusions and Future Directions -- References. 
505 8 |a Chapter 15: Subadult Mortality Among Hunter-Gatherers: Implications for the Reconstruction of Care During Prehistory -- Introduction -- Material and Methods -- Results -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 16: Digitised Diseases: Seeing Beyond the Specimen to Understand Disease and Disability in the Past -- Introduction -- A Complementary Tool to the Bioarchaeology of Care -- Case Reviews Informed by New Approaches -- Leprosy -- Chronic Infection: Osteomyelitis -- Tuberculosis -- An Integrated Discipline -- Disease Management -- Summary -- References -- Part III: Ethics and Accountability in the Bioarchaeology of Care -- Chapter 17: What Ethical Considerations Should Inform Bioarchaeology of Care Analysis? -- Introduction -- What Were the Main Reactions in the Archaeological Literature to Discussion of Past Caregiving? -- What Beliefs and Values Were the First Objections to Inferences of Care Based on? -- Objection 1: A Moral Economy of Science -- Objection 2: Cognitive Relativism -- Objection 3: Moral Universalism, Moral Relativism, Moral Pessimism -- Are the Beliefs and Values Informing the Recently Developed Bioarchaeology of Care Model of Analysis Sufficiently Robust to Overcome Past Criticism? -- Answer to Objection 1: A Moral Economy of Science -- Answer to Objection 2: Cognitive Relativism (Medical, Social) -- Answer to Objection 3: Moral Universalism, Moral Relativism, Moral Pessimism -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 18: Highlighting the Importance of the Past: Public Engagement and Bioarchaeology of Care Research -- Introduction -- The Context for Research into Past Caregiving -- The Bioarchaeology of Care Methodology and the Online Index of Care Application -- Vampires, Plagues Pits and Timeless Lovers: Traditional and Digital Media -- Public Engagement and Communication: The Rise of Social Media. 
505 8 |a Ethics in Communicating Bioarchaeology. 
588 |a Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. 
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